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New England Governors’ Renewable Energy Blueprint

New England Governors’ Renewable Energy Blueprint . New England States Committee on Electricity at the Restructuring Roundtable September 19, 2009. About NESCOE . New England’s Regional State Committee Governed by a board of Managers appointed by each of the New England Governors

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New England Governors’ Renewable Energy Blueprint

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  1. New England Governors’ Renewable Energy Blueprint New England States Committee on Electricity at the Restructuring Roundtable September 19, 2009

  2. About NESCOE New England’s Regional State Committee Governed by a board of Managers appointed by each of the New England Governors Focus on system planning & expansion and resource adequacy More information at nescoe.com New England States Committee on Electricity

  3. TheBlueprint’s Path September 2008 NEGC Resolution February 2009 Governors write to President Obama, Congressional leaders March 2009 States request ISO-NE perform technical analysis July 2009 ISO-NE issues draft Renewable Development Scenario Analysis September 2009 NEGC Adopts Blueprint New England States Committee on Electricity

  4. Renewable Development Scenario Analysis Background & Observations New England States Committee on Electricity

  5. Policy Choices Informed By Data • States asked ISO-NE to study “significant sources of renewable energy available to New England, the most effective means to integrate them into our power grid, and the estimated costs” and then developed study assumptions • ISO-NE conducted RDSA • Looks out 20 years • 9 conceptual transmission scenarios • Focus on wind resources • Up to 12,000 MW of wind in New England • 7,500 MW onshore & 4,500 MW offshore • Incremental cases from 2,000 to 8,000 MW New England States Committee on Electricity

  6. What the RDSA is Not • Not an effort to identify 2030 supply, demand levels • Not meant to discount contribution other low-carbon resources will make to New England • Not meant to signal any reduced interest in efficiency and demand reduction • Not an identification of preferred resource locations or preferred transmission pathways • Competitive markets or solicitations will determine what resources are developed, where, and by whom New England States Committee on Electricity

  7. New England has Options slide courtesy ISO-NE; refer also to RDSA, dated September 1, 2009, page 23 New England States Committee on Electricity

  8. Historical Law & Policies Support Development • Each New England state has historically encouraged development of renewable resources in & outside state borders • clean energy grants, net metering rules, renewable portfolio standards, etc. • Wind is eligible under all definitions of renewable energy credits in current state & proposed federal renewable portfolio standards • Provides revenue stream from REC sales New England States Committee on Electricity

  9. Ample Resources, Choices • The New England region has a vast quantity of untapped renewable resources • more than 10,000 MW (nameplate) on & off-shore wind power potential • If developed at conservative levels, there are ample renewable resources to enable New England to meet renewable energy goals • More aggressive development could enable New England to export renewable power to neighboring regions New England States Committee on Electricity

  10. Transmission Options Potential transmission projects can be identified to transfer power from off & on-shore wind resources to New England load & for export to our neighbors • Transmission costs vary with level of resource development • Expansion of near off-shore wind resources could be accomplished incrementally with lower-voltage, lower-cost interconnections directly into coastal load centers New England States Committee on Electricity

  11. Informed Choices The level of renewable resources that will succeed in regional markets will be driven primarily by cost considerations, including transmission infrastructure and other development costs, as well as revenue opportunities that derive from federal & state policy mechanisms & incentives New England States Committee on Electricity

  12. Helping to Bring New, Cost-Effective, Renewable Resources to Market Procurement and Contracting New England States Committee on Electricity

  13. Long-Term Contracting Authority • All six states have authority to approve long-term contracts for capacity, energy and/or renewable energy credits • Across New England, procurement is generally executed through competitive solicitations • Typically, competitive procurement is implemented by utilities, subject to review & approval by Public Utility Commissions New England States Committee on Electricity

  14. Massachusetts’ Contracting Authority DPU can approve long-term contracts of any duration or type if proposed by an EDC to meet basic service needs or to reduce the delivered price of power New requirement for EDCs to solicit long-term contracts for the purchase of renewable power EDCs can submit for DPU approval contracts of any duration to meet their RPS obligations DPU has authority to approve long-term contracts proposed by EDC to meet future basic service needs New England States Committee on Electricity

  15. Contract Synchronization Opportunities • States generally have authority over contract term length • A majority have flexibility with respect to contracts with resources within or out of state • States with integrated resource planning have added flexibility to synchronize procurement with others • Common goal in each state’s contracting authority relates to securing low cost, cost-effective or cost-stabilizing power New England States Committee on Electricity

  16. Helping to Bring New, Cost-Effective, Renewable Resources to Market SitinG interstate Transmission New England States Committee on Electricity

  17. Siting Authority All six states generally have exclusive siting authority All six states have sufficient statutory flexibility to coordinate Several states have specific & broad coordination authority New England States Committee on Electricity

  18. Massachusetts’ Coordination Authority Massachusetts is authorized to: Conduct joint investigations Hold joint hearings in or outside of Massachusetts Issue joint or concurrent orders with any other state Function under compacts with other states in certain circumstances New England States Committee on Electricity

  19. Commonalities Create Opportunity States’ siting review timelines sufficiently similar to enable some degree of simultaneous review Common applicationelements Common required findings New England States Committee on Electricity

  20. Coordination Opportunities • Conduct approximately concurrent state siting reviews • Develop common component of the application • project description • maps • information on system impact • costs • testimony on facility need • Issue coordinated discovery on overall project, streamline responses New England States Committee on Electricity

  21. Further Coordination Opportunities • Hold joint hearing on issues relating to common findings • Local Processes Preserved: joint hearing not to displace local hearings on local matters • Consider adopting joint or concurrent orders on common required findings New England States Committee on Electricity

  22. State-Federal Partnership State and federal officials working together will reinforce our ability to simultaneously advance our clean energy goals & the nation’s interest in reducing carbon emissions, diversifying energy supply and reducing reliance on foreign fossil fuel New England States Committee on Electricity

  23. Regional Processes Informing Federal Action • New England’s work to date will add considerable value to national planning dialogue • Federal administrative agency actions and/or any federal financial assistance should be linked to regional planning & scenario analyses and should: • Support New England’s plan to encourage development of renewable resources in the context of competitive market mechanisms or solicitations • Give priority to renewable resources indentified in regional processes New England States Committee on Electricity

  24. Conclusion New England has the essential elements in place to help bring our cost-effective, secure, low-carbon resources to market • natural resources • technical analysis to inform policy choices • cooperative experience and authority to do more • statutory flexibility • mutual state and national interest in increasing renewable power New England States Committee on Electricity

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